The Usurper’s Therapeutic Counsel: How Leo XIV Replaces the Gospel with Self-Help Sentimentality
The National Catholic Register portal reports that on May 21, 2026, the Vatican published a letter from the antipope Leo XIV (Robert Prevost) addressed to an 18-year-old Italian youth named Pietro from Reggio Calabria, who expressed anxieties about finishing high school and beginning university studies. The young man reportedly shared his fears about losing friendships, discerning God’s will, and his dream of “building and realizing the project of a family united in the love of Christ.” The usurper’s response, filled with what the article describes as “tenderness” and “fatherly advice,” reassured the youth that “the love of Jesus will always accompany him,” encouraged him to seek “profound peace,” and advised daily prayer, reception of sacraments, and consultation with “wise individuals.” The letter concludes with an entrustment to Mary, “who as a young woman learned to trust despite having kept in her heart questions greater than herself.”
This exchange, presented as a touching pastoral moment, is in reality a masterclass in the conciliar sect’s systematic replacement of Catholic doctrine with sentimental therapeutic counsel — a substitution that leaves souls spiritually defenseless before the gravest dangers of the modern age.







